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Ohio statesman (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1870-10-27

Ohio statesman (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1870-10-27 page 1

... Vfl:v " a ..Ci yioto:i;:ic ;:TTn.'Ji - - - - .: -i .---?'-n.:M ff r:- i .... . . 01: .6 , " A it I 1 -N , -.AIIT A CO. -i . - . -,. j ' f r J. . '1 AV.E3 KH.L3, t . - - .- . : Karros ; CFFIfE, to. 74 KwtyCfrk Street. , . .'. Sabserijitloa Bte, ' . Da;iv,bTmail,e -', i T-Wklv...i...r SO wr 4 Wl 'fcsejujf Sou C . W nnwir I dubs of ti - j-t inoc'fi .et twtv CO Lu .thinners invariably iiunui ., ,,'.i IBS OFFICIAL" VTE. . . ,s "vf, Eav, fall 0Edl vote ef "Ohio . last, on Slate officers. . .The returns ', fcru tbe renjainihjr connty-i-HaiTiaoB were received at the Secretary of State'i , ae31ce yeatarday. The footing 'up made by the official arejaa follow :-SIECRCTART OF STaTV. T.ita! niAAA.... . . 4i9 rr , Imm R. ShTMreo4 S21.T09 . W uiiatn aelaley SMS 015 - JaytA01.. i 863 Sherwood mt Heialey 16,64 ,-.-. t T .,rJLTGI OF StTPEKMB COCBT. ItUlltU,... ..A-J..1.4. to....i..4S,10 OeorCT W. M rlveine..... !. K. A. F irrmm . ! I. Stewart t.eio wtunwBuriu ................ K,e93 fKMflTROIXKB OP THB TRSASOST. io . i-WiHiaT. VMaoau. il.7! r .WLion oyer Hk41ob ...;. 17,425 i , .. l MKMBKK BOARD OF PCBUC WOBK8. Toialvoto... V. 42950 - Phtlip T. Hening ;.S?,W Willi Spo-r u-.J'.,Oii( ICavea a. Cjiaa . -ajxiZ ' 'BBlretnf over Sprncer 15,725 v' -'i '- .The. highest vote tin year, on Seere-' - "" tary of State, 429,587, is ft omftller rote than has been agt in the State aiaoe 1865, Then Gcacral Cox irao chosen Governor over General Morqaj. and ia even less tbaa the Vote at the Presidential election iavlfi6a.-hy..XJ,00a -Compared with the vote of the preceding two years, it U ae follows ': " " : 1ST0. ; SOi.Ol Denooratia... KopuW lean . . ..S0,2I ' Tsmparaao - W.I Total vote 3 18, 8 463,340 489,587 The Temperance party is the only or- . gun ration that appears to be on the la " cseaje. While Hhe' ether parties . fall sadly behini their vote of last year, the Prohibitionists have more than qaadrn pled their strength. If they keep on at '. s ' this rate for a few years longer, the whole State of Ohio will be drinking water. Their opportunity is apparent to the dullest politician, and wo all know the ;a temperance organisation, comprises some of the shrewdest political intellects in the State, chaps like Joky B. "sly fello The Eadical majority on Secretary of , ,. State. is Bade ep entirely of negro votes. That element is mnch stronger ia the . ! .'State than was generally apposed it " would be, and every colored individual ' entitled to the ballot cast his "suffering" at least onee, even if he did not repeat. . It will require some extraordinvry con- ' vulsion in the natnral world, an earth- qaake say, or the possible candidacy of Faxow Doughs, Dxacok Foindbxtkb, or Captain Kko Brown of the Fusileers, in the political arrangements, to induce " aoch another fall tarn out of the race, or such unanimous voting one way. Of course, we except the contingency of ' - the sueeeas of the Sixteenth Amendment which will admit the colored sisters to all the sweets of political strife, -to tin manifest iiuf m tiuuatu JimiuiitJuu f ' -' -f their seal iat the revival eeaaoo. The , , subject grows overpowering, and we out ' 'it short with this extract from the Enquirer, justly lashing those Democrats .wio, thought lea? of, thuir sacred privilege " than Pomp or Cesar of a more -able eompUxjon v "At the past election.when 30,000 blacks voted, more than 1UO.000 whites neglected to avail themselves, of the privilege. For this enormous neglect to vote no apology whatever, no exonerating plea, can be made. If our political mis-government is not groat enough at prea-U ent-if the oppression upon the people is ot sufcient to induoe them to seek to avert it it is difficult to imagine any circumstance in the future that will do so. As to despairing of being able to do s so, it ia a most unmanly and cowardly sentiment, being worthy of slaves rather than of freemen. The Democracy of Ohio - in this election have been especially unpardonable. Had - f i they oa to- the polls as they did two - - years ago for Secretary of State, they would have given 250,000 votes, and elected onr ticket by 29,000 majority. Their vote for Seyuoar iar Preaideot was 17,000 snore than the BepablieaM have now gives, and for Mx. Pendleton for Governor last year, it was 7,000 in excess of tbe present UxiUial figure. Kvea eix years eo they gave a larger , ' vote to Usiuril ieCieiian for President than they have now. A fine opportunity l.r securing political ascendency in Ohio was aever before so wantonly thrown , -way." THE NEWS. ' ' 4 It is nnderstood that ' Hon. Tuornas Hayne has declined the Democratic ' nomination for Congress in the Chicago district. .-"'". ' 'f The Intersal lieveuus bureau has issued a tax mannel for cigar mannfacter-ers in order to guard against frauds, and to insure the enforcement of the law. . j lion. Charles Sumner delivered one ef a Lyceum course of lectures, Tuesday night, on The duel between France and Germany, with its lesson to civilization." . i,- At Philadelphia, yesterday, the Bed Stockings scored 7 and the Atlanties 11. The Naturalization Convention between the United States and Great Britain was .yesterday othciaUy published. so- Archibald G ' Lectie, of the firm of , r f . Lackifr & f Co-j distillers and, liquor J -. dealers,;;f, Cjiwago, whila . engaged, on Monday last, at Loda, Illinois, in potting a distillery in operation, fell into a large . tab ailed wiJa boUiag water, and was so badly scaldoathat bo died in a few hours. ' The First ya"tTphalr Bank of Grafton, ' MaaaachnsetU,' was robbed onTnesday .night e all Itti.jToudft iU watchman, Mr. ,.v-siJaiels,'liaviBC fi .-bean gagged and .. - baodeoffed. - There were five men en-4 , ..: gaged In the robbery. The amount taken ' is not yet stated, but included all the property of priraUT depositors, and is estimated at between $200,000 and $300,000. '""' 5 'A match has been made between two . three-year olds tr $25,000 a aide, and $10,000 forfeit, between a horse to be imported 'from 'England" and an American horse, both to be named within a month. The race is to be a dash of two- miles, to be run at the fall meeting of Jerome v.rV in 171. Tn rjuienither horse is net ..'JIT 2 nmnieQ within the time, a forfeit of fiiOO la to be paid, and the match is off. vTb appeal to the bullet was taken ia . r ' Cnmberiaad, Md on the 17th, by Harry , C. Black, wha shot Colonel W. W. Mc- ' ' " Ka':2. Jr.. aead with revolver, ea Balti- ' " ' mhw street, aa he passed him, and then , : - troirtf nomwr said to the awe-striok- eu spectators: fcIhave killed theG d ." A-t cceaodrel who rained my sister, and . here's another ball for the man who says '. didn't do rights He then- immediate ly aorrendered tumself. and ts now in jail. . . 1 , ,11 ' . . I J i ' i 1 i '' ' 1 t . - I . .- . . I . , I I . L ' 9 ' ' ' ! VOLv XXXIX the wis ii Erncrc. Interview Arranged between Thiers v and Bismarck - Germans Beport Several .Victories) on Saturday Keported Bd Kepublican Troubles at Majraaillefl Failure of Bona? artists to Negotiate through Baz&iae. ' I , t J - 'r 1 i- ! . .- - 'i ; .- : . -to i thikrs xna bismakcb:. j FB1IICB Loxdox, October 26. The Pmlt If Vatelle annonnces that a meettog between Thiers and Bismarck has bee arranged, the Government at Toara having aooepted the principles of the armistice. : Troeha made aaother attempt"to force an outlet near Ivry on Monday, but' Was repnlsed. - ' . . '; , . xtr LOAK RUMORED KVaCIUTIOX Of - OHU1K8. I 1 Tours,-Xtetober 26. An extra edition of the Jfesifevf-appeared last evening, con taining a decree for the issue of a loan of two hundred and fifty mHliona on Thurs day, the 27th inst-, under the title of the loan for the national defense.""; News is confirmed that Garibaldi has successfully attacked the Prussians. Advices from Marseilles show that dis orders are still prevalent there. : Even the authority of Esquires is now denied. At Lyons all is quiet.- The National Guard have greatly assisted the local officers in preserving order. It was rumored last evening that the Prussians were evacuating Orleans yes terday. - ' ENGAGEMENTS ON THE AGEXOX. Carlsruhe, October 26. rhe Gazette, ef this city, , last evening published a dispatch from General Boyer to the Duke of Baden, containing the ; following intelligence : On Saturday, the 22d, several victori ous engagements occurred on the river Ageoon, at Yoray, Cuesey, Anzzou and Gennerville. The French losses were se vere. Battalions of th First, Third, Fourth and Fifth Baden regiments took part in the actions. The German losses were generally insignificant. The fol lowing is a complete list of the casualties suffered by the Baden troops: Killed and wounded, 38; cap tared officers, 12; rank and file, 200. RUSSIA MOVEMENTS. London, October 26. The Germans on their westward march gutted the city of Besanoon, in. the Department of Doubs. They took thirty-seven carriages filled with wounded French soldiers. The German, troops are apparently concentrating at Bheims. The French eommander at Verdun has sent a defiant message to the Prussians. The Germans refrain from attacking Amiens. Their troops at Bauvais and Soissons are retiring towards Mezieres. The town of Chateau d'Un has been literally destroyed by the Prussians. - NEGOTIATIONS WITH BAZAIME. tober 26. German negotiations with Bazaine for the capitulation of his army continue, notwithstanding - the disapproval of the French Governmen t. The military" authorities before Pans have successfully examined the defenses of that city by means of balloons yThe Paris and Orleans railway has been nearly restored.. The Prussians refuse further paroles to captured French officers, because it has been ascertained that many thus. released have resumed service in the French army. RED REPCBUCAM TROUBLES GERMANS . STTXX IN ORLEANS. London, October 26. Troubles at Mar seilles are increasing'. The Bed Repub licans are largely ia the ascendant, and in open rehetli against the Republican authorities at Paris and Tours. They haws evw ausiiiso far as to offer a reward for Gamhotta's head. Gesiave Flourens has been finally dis charged. ' Dispatches from Tours, Tuesday even ing, state that the pending- peace negoti ations are due to the initiative taken by Great Britain. A free pass for Thiers to enter Paris is not expected for a week or ten days. .",' Notwithstanding the French report of the German evacuation of Orleans, it has been ascertained that the eity is still oc cupied- . ' ,. There are no indications of an immedi ate advance on Blois and Vendome. A YOUNG GIRL CREATES AN EXCITEMENT. London, October 26. Dispatches from Tours announce that a young girl of that city is creating a most -intense excite ment by an imitation of the example of Joan of Arc. Hundreds of enthusiastic persons joined her' standard. Her appeals for recruits are said to be singu larly pathetic and eloquent.. , t ' ' RUSSIAN PRESS. St. Petersburg, October 26. The Journal (official organ) hopes the discussion of the conditions of peace will not be mixed up with the discussion of armistice. The Constituent Assembly Is the only competent power to decide that question. The writer hopes farther that in the pending armistice, in deference to humanity, Paris may be revictualed.' '' KCIK AROUND PARIS. London, October 26. Paris is girdled with ruin. Tne country outside of the walls for miles is desolate. The United States steamer Franklin has been repaired, and left Portsmouth for Spithead, where she will take ammunition, etc " BAIXOONLNO. ' t TOURS, October 26. Yesterday a bal loon which the authorities were trying to dispatch to Paris was carried against a tree and badly damaged. Another enort will be made to-morrow. A messenger from the Government, who has Import ant news to communicate, will essay the hazardous experiment of visiting Paris ' '; THE NEW LOAN "London, October 26. The books for subscriptions to the new . French loan have been owned is seventy out of eighty-nine Departments of France, nine- tecn"beiog occupied by Germans. ', ' SIEGE OF PARIS, The Prussians again announce that, fire will be opened on Paris on the 29th inst One thousand stoves have been or dered for the huts of the Prussians be sieging Metz. 4 ; , i "-'OOLtJMBUS, OHIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER Genera! Cambriell otaiins a victory for the French at ChatiHorr le Due. Ji . , The French regard 'England's last ef fort at mediation- with: 'extreme distrast F .ULCER OF THE: BONAPARTIST3. Loxdou, Oetober 26. A dispstsh has beea received by the .Herald -eorretpand- ent at "Bertitf, front' .Jltz,1wTilc5 states that all the endeavors & the par pr yit Rati anof lata tjirrtn tj Tt&zain. Iiv. iwhlnh I rftce could be restored on the basis of Ml.!.- x- 1 'T i I . - hun x.ui;icn uwuiuiu aDvu, ua v c been abandoned, AU hopes of pece are therefore now at an- end, and peace can' only now be. gained Jj inleryentton of neutral ixiwers.-4 ilJ' iJ - neutral powers. lBrsMA. r BBCSSEts, October 2&T7Aconerence between Bismarck and the representatives of various goufhern States of Germany regarding terms, pt unification has already' begun." The Bavarian representative announced that hia GoTemmsnt desired a separate mTTrtaryTm(Tgef"and special taxes, as well a vpwtal postal yet vice. He arreed in case these points are conceded, that her deputies in Jthi .Fed eral Parliament shall net partlclpare-in d soussions on the Federal budget. It ia J not thought these terms will be accepted. POLITICAL, PRISONERS RELEASED. Berlin, October 26. Herr Jacohy and seven other political pesoprj $ave been releaeed. 1 ''''' I - ' .. ITAE. - j THE JOBEIGX MINISTER OS THE ' PAPAL . ' -BULU.'' .'t e .i tt 1 Florence, October ,2CV The J e. 3finister ef Foreign Affairs. a hjfj of. '.circular letter to representatives- .ot Italy in foreign countries, denying the assertions made in the Ute PapaLbnll,' relative to reasons for dissolving the Ecumenical Council.'-' The Minister says Italy has not raised, nor will she. raise . any;'' obstacle whatever, either to the re-aasewibling of the Council, or perfect freedom of its discussions, i" EXPULSION OF B9NAP ARTISTS DEMANDED. Brussels, October 26. Thisbity continues to be the seat of action 'of the Bonapartisby intrigues The Independence Beige still denounces1 these violations of international law, and ealla : upon the Government to expel the culprits. f fl . ' XOYAX. MATRIMONY, "v) ! London, October 26It i officially an nounced that the Queen, yesterday, at the Council at Balmoral, sanctioned the contemplated marriage of the Princess Louise and Marquis of Lome. ' . TUB MISSING BOATS OF THE CAMBRIA. ; London, October 26.-5 P. M. There are no tidings of the missing boats of the steamer Cambria, aad it is 'now thought they went down with the ship. NEW YORK; ;'. " Military Pre walioniJii r.Hl e clioa Alloraer Cleaeral Akcrataa Qaarters at the Astav Moaoe Biejata Sjafaatry at Now York Other Hilltarr Forces Will Vimdl it Caavoaleat to he Near Nothiaa HootrB ftsaa the Sheaaaoteah lIlIoaloBarf Iteaas. '.'. '' '" , ' FEDERAL PREPARATIONS PORTRE ON TROL OF NEW YORK tLECTIONB. ..'.i- Saw Toax, Oetober 86, 1876.. Attorney General Akermsn has estab- llished hia headquarters at the Astor House, where be will remain till after' the election to respond te all questions that may arise. .He is instructed to sea that f all the rights of the citizens are respected, and that the authority ef the United States Government is maintained. He was in consultation with United1 States Senator Conkling yesterday,, and the Senator subsequently remarked that the determination was to enforce the aot"of Congress at all hazards., ', . ' i No doubtful or questionable power will be assumed by the officers, but they will enforce such processes and provisions as they are assured they will be sustained in in the execution of the law&i The preparations for the purpose are being perfected every day, and there will be no lack of authority to back up the officers. The Eighth United States Infantry will arrive to-night. This regiment ia about six hundred strong, and will be reinforced by , four hundred ' recruits, who await its arrival. - It will find quarters on one of the islands in East Biver, and when the emereenev is over.' thev will proceed to the Canadian frontier, and go into winter quarter. 'j . . : j Other forces ot considerable strength will find it convenient to quartet In the vicinity of New York during the next two weeks, and though lew people will probably ever see them, the fact that thev are on hand will be consoling to one party, and will exercise a wholesome re straint upon the evil doers of the other. The United states omeers cnargea witn the dutr of enforcing the law of Con gress for tbe preservation of the purity of the ballot mean business this .time, and the Government means to sustain them. ... ' The Attorney General telegraphed to the President that matters were quiet in the city, and that the resistance on Mon day was not of a serious character-. w Secretarv JKobeeon lelt this oitv on Monday. The naval forees. at Brooklyn and upon the waters of New York , harbor wilt oe neui in reaaiuess to essuts me oi- fioers in erving process end in enforcing the laws. There is bo backwardness anywhere. " .; ; : ' ' '" THE SaKNANDOAH NOT UEARD fROM. No intelligence has yet been, received of the arrival in European waters of the corvette Shenandoah, Commander Clark H. Wells, which sailed from, Boston on the 2d or 3d day of September Jast. She is now over fifty days out, and has taken a long passage to eastward tor tnis sea son oi tne year, it is quite prooauie sne may nave been tne ship seen cusmastea by an English ship about the 12th. of September, i ' ' - )!;' About eight thousand special Deoutv Marsnais will ne sworn in by election aay. ...... BIBLE UNION. . Y The American Bible Union held their twenty-first anniversary to-day. ""The expenditures for the' year were $53,567, and receipts ow,ow, leaving a balance due the treasurer. ' REGENERATION. In the Episcopal Board, of Missions, Bishop Whitehouse presiding, there, was a long discussion on a resolution et.tain- ing the work oi regenerating colored peo pie, which was finally adopted, and $50, 000 devoted to the object. A eenimitteo was appointed to induce railroad managers to pass missionaries for. little or nothing to Uieu nelos oi labor. . "" "" INSURANCE DECISION, A verdict was given to-day "agaihst' an insurance company,, under a charge: of tbe Judge, 'tnat an oral eontraat of iu suranoe was binding, to tne amount of 164.000. in favor ot tne owners of the 1 wrecked steamer boeridan. (V efNblNNATi;; ; .-.It''-. '- . . - : 1 " 11 f Procardia t the Natieaal Cayiaal . - if . r. I CisnisH.a. ; . .' " CnfcrATi . Ootutrtt 6j 1870. "The Capital Convention reassembled to Bear read the letter ef J. W.Forney, but the document was hot at hand.' ;"Tbe committee on Resolutions reported in favor of the removal of the Capital to the Mississippi .Valley, to some point as near as possible to the center of population, territory, prod action and transpor tation, with reference to the future as welltaji thf .ntesent . demands of the nation ; also, opposing further appropria tions for new buildings in the District of woiumDia; reanirmuig tne resolution or tne st. Louis Convention, ana reoom-mendiug. the- appointment of a commit tee to memorialize Congress .at Its next session in favor of the appointment of a joint resolution authorizing the appoint ment oi commissioners to examine., the quest uisy ef , nnoval and re-location of the Capital) and to report at an early dayi J A Hi..', A f v. . . Mr. W. M. Beach, of Ohio, 'offered " a substitute, declaring that-the-ittia tor the removal was uncalled for and unwise, and proposing a tine die adjourn ment of the Convention. ' A discussion followed, participated in by Hollaui, of Kentucky ; Forshey, of lexaa ; Keaves, ot Muwonri ; Moonlight, of Kansas ; Ambrose, of Nebraska : Scott. of Washington Territory; Coggswell, of neorasKa; wayne vrriswoia, ot unio; Coy, of Illmois : Moore, of Ohio : Beards- ley, of Iowa; and Black, of Illinois , in favor, ana wuiiama, of Ohio, opposed. Mr. Beach's substitute was 'lost, there being only two votes in the affirmative. Mr. Williams, of Ohio, moved to designate Cincinnati as the place for the Capi tal, bat withdrew his motion. Oa motion, an Executive Committee, consisting of one front Each State and Territory represented was appointed . to take charge of the whole subject and oall a Convention, and employ other means as deemed best. iA vote of approval of the action of Con gress in refusing to make appropriations for further improvement to public buildings in the District of Columbia, was passed, and the Convention adjourned ZEOPEBANCB. Oaeaiaar Meaaioa of the Ohio mate Tcaptraan Alliaaee. SIouiCT Vsksoh, October 93, 1870. Correspondence of the Ohio Statbsmah. Thei Oho. State. Temperance Alliance met this evening, agreeably with notice published throughout the State, in Good Templars' Hall, with a fair attendance of delegates," Rev. J. W. Osborn, President of the State Alliance-, ia the Chair. J. S. McClelland was appointed Secre tary,' and the convention opened with prayer by Bev. D. C Hervey. " The President then delivered an earnest and powerful address, which was listened to withthe closest attention and the deepest interest. He was succeeded by Judge T. C. Jones, of Delaware, in rather a legal and argumentative address, which was able and well received; and after tome romarks made hy different delegates the convention adjourned untilto-morrow morning at 9 o'clock. --- - - Deuqatk. OHIO NEWS. Messrs, K. A T, Mears, of Steuben ville, narrowly ' escaped serious loss by fire Tuesday afternoon. ., l4v. Mr. Hall, of Mansfield, has been called to the pastorate of the First Presbyterian Cliarch. at Springfield, with a salary of $2,500 and parsonage furnished gratia. . The naw church edifice, recently built by the United Brethren, at Lagonda, will be dedicated on. Sunday, November 6th, at half-past ten o'clock in the morning Biohop Glossbrenner is expected to officiate. - - - A boy named Riohard Curtner was in stantly killed about a half mile west of Troy at 5 oclock Tuesday evening. He whs haulms a load of wood, when from some accident he fell off and the wheels of the wagon passed over him, crushing him in a terrible manner. A meeting was held in the Board of Trade rooms at Dayton, Tuesday evening, to coasider propositions for an air line coal road from New Lexington, Ohio, and another between Dayton and the coal and iron 'fields of Jackson county The Jackson county coal ia represented very pure, Hard coal, and is now used for' smelting iron without coking. it is a snaic - coat and lnexnaustible. Among the advantages spoken of, was the tact ' that Dayton was on an air line drawn between Chicago and Symmes Creek, where a connection would be made . with .the groat ChesaDeake and Ohio road to Norfolk, Virginia. The en- Sneeringof the line between Dayton and illaboro is now going on, and the osti; mated cost to the people of Montgomery and Clinton counties is about four hundred , thousand dollars. If the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad adopt this line, the assurance is given that they will furnish the iron and rolling stock for it. The long-contested Jumel will case in the New York Courts afforded an opportunity a few days ago for a passage at arms between the counsel George, the Count -Joannes, for the plaintiffs, and Charles O'Conor, the celebrated counsel or, for the- defendant. The Count, after reading his complaint, which required two hours, and the defendant's answer, which consumed another, made aa open ing speech, embracing biography, histo ry, skilled mimicry, eulogy, poetry, rhapsody and impassioned appeal, introduced documentary evidence, when Mr. O'Conor bemsr asked ir be bad anything to say, quietly replied that he had nothing. "You can't say anything," spoke up the Count, with fiery veuemence ; , you took salvage of five per cent, on the making of that will ; you got fifty thousand dollars for your part of the work." "That's a lie," with coolly impassive deliberation, an swered air. U'Conor, rising to his feet, "like many other lies that have been uttered by the connsel to-day." The Court dismissed the 'plaintiff's case. A telegram from Key West, 25h, says: Daring the hurricane that blew here from he northeast, op , the 20th inst;, there were six shipwrecks in the harbor. The United States steamer Tuscarora, after having broken from three anchors, went to sea. xne rest ot tne squadron with- stood tbe gale. The Tuscarora is safe. The shipping at Havana was badly dam. aged. communication by telegraph lines was interrupted tor two days. A man named A. T. Nicol shot himself three times in the head with a pistol, on the rear platform of a ladies' car of the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad, near &taunteur "a., last Saturday morning, fatally wounding himself. Grief at the sudden death of his wife, during his temporary absence, on Thursday night, led to this act. His wife's remains were on the same tram, she having been on visit at the time of her death. If'- Tf VOTERS AND SOLDIERS, Facts Bearlni on the Coming Elec ; tioniaXew- York, i Turn MaiNH. Btotwce a Baalical KaraHawat for Vlfhtiaa; Parpoaes a Baaical Coawaa for Tollaa B eT ytACISa, : i. Ex-Governor Seymour, of New York, delivered a remarkable speech in Oneida county, of that State, last week, which is attracting a great deal of attention in the East. It was in reference to the charge that the vote in the city of New York is so fraudulent and excessive that it has wrongfully changed the result of elections, and placed political power in the hands of the Democratic party. In the first place - Governor Seymour showed, that even by the recent Radical census, which gives New York city a population of little less than a million of sonls, the largest vote ever cast in the city 156,000 in 1868 was not equal to the proportion of. voters to' population ia counties where the Republican party is largely in the eaceadant. "If," said Mr. Seymour, " the vote in the city of New York, in proportion to its numbers, as shown by the census, shows frand, then, unless the census will show that New York has more than five millions and a half of people, the Republican districts ef this State are steeped in fraud to their very eyelids." r i Referring to the reoent census in New York city, Mr. Seymour pointed to the fact that the census-takers had not only a moneyed interest in doing their work carelessly, but they had also a strong political reason, which was the expediency of reducing the population of a Democratic stronghold, and thus depriving it ot its rightful representation in Congress. ' , "l. '" But the crowning point of theex-Governor's careful Bpeech was his comparison of the census of New York, in 1870, with the military enrollment in 1864, both made by the agents of the Federal Government. In the one ease tne policy of the Federal autkoritiet a inn to reduce thepopulation to a to diminish Democratic representation in Congress. In the other, it was to increase the population so as to call an unjust proportion of drafted mm from a Democratic city. That's the whole story. In point of deliberate villainy it has never been approached in the history ef the Union.' It shows the Radical leaders engaged ia it to be a gang of the most unprincipled and reckless scoun drels American politics has ever vom ited forth. , And the reader must not for get that the Federal Administration is now engaged iu aiding in the final consummation of this stupendous villainy, and to carry out their plans its office-holding " hirelings in the metropolis threaten to carry bloodshed and devas-iatiwi tntothe-Btieeta oftbo CttJ'. We annex the portion of ex-Governor Seymour's speech in which he exposes the Radical villainy that New York has large population for drafting purposes, but an unexpected and unreasonably small population for voting purposes! .... CENSUS OF NEW YORK COMPARED WITH THE ENROLLMENT OF 1864. - Those who have tried to fasten the charge , of fraud upon the ' Democratic party of the State of New York have not only failed in this, but they have unwittingly unmasked a monstrous wrong of which they themselves have been guilty. This question about the population of the eities of New York and Brooklyn and of Democratic districts is not a new one. It agitated this State a few years since and was tbe subject ot a bitter controversy, in their haste to denounce others; in their seal to draw false conclusions from the census returns, they forget that they are bringing forth proofs that they were guilty of crimes of ten-fold deeper dye than those they untruly charge upon others. During the war an enrollment was made ef those who were liable to do military duty. The government never did an act more grave, more solemn, or one which called for more unquestionable fairness than this. The sac redness of its purpose, the preservation of our Union, should have invested it with a species ot sanctity. It was a measure which touched the lives of our people, the happiness of their homes, and which was to carry death and mourning into so many family circles. It was to be . A GREAT LOTTERY OF LIFE And the thought that there could be fraud, falsehood and injustice ia its con duct shocks every mind that Is. not dead to Justice and to mercy. But when this enrollment was made, it was found to be so unequal and partisan that, with others, I deemed it a duty to look into it. I will give you a tew-of the results ef that scrutiny. I beg every man within the sound of my voice to recall to his mind the statements which were made in the controversy which grew out of that sub ject. I ask yon all, without regard to your political views, to read again what was said that time in political speeches and in political journals. It was found under this enrollment, when a call was made for three hundred thousand men, that nine Democratic Congressional districts which, at that time, gave one hundred andV eighty-six thousand votes, were called upon to furnish more than forty thousand men, while sixteen Republican districts, with a vote of more than three hundred and fifty-three thou sand, were charged with but thirty-three thousand, lite districts lorced to send this excessive amount were mostly in the cities of New York and Brooklyn. The first nine Congressional districts, which comprise these cities and adjacent counties, with a population at that time rated at 1,218,949, were called upon for 26,166 men, while Massachusetts, with ten Congressional districts and a population then rated at 1,231,006, had to furnish only 15,126. At the same time the quotas of Vermont and New Hampshire, with a population of 641,171, with six Congressional districts, gave only 7,099 men, while two districts in the eity of New York, with a population ot only 283,229, were called upon for 7,b&3 men. STARTLING FACTS. I ask yon to notioe some startling facts about the Sixth Congressional District of New lorfc. You have, in the flew xorK Jriiase and in other papers, statements which show that in many wards in this district the vote is unduly large in comparison with census returns. These statements are put forth as clear proofs of election frauds. Now, if the census returns of these wards are not false, the Republican party and its leaders have been guilty of the foulest fraud ever practiced on a people. B v the census returns, there are only 118.200 nooDle in the Congres sional district, showing a tailing off of more than 16,000 since loon, the only district in the city in which it is claimed there is a loss of population. I his is a Demooratio district. Now, in the enroll ment of 1864, there was charged against this district more than 30,000 men, as liable to military duty, when in the county of Oneida, which is said to have 27, 1870. about the same population, only 9,190 were onroueo. More men were enrolled ia the .Sixth Congressional district as liable to military duty than in any other tuauriuk iu uui state or nation, nearly three times as many as were claimed, of any Republican district of this State, although many of them exceeded it in numbers by the census returns. There ooald not have been 30,000 men liable to enrollment ia this district unleei it had a population of about 300,000. , When this was pointed out by me, it wat .said ia answer, not only that the district had a large population, but that it was rapidly increasing ia a umbers. - Those who are parading tbe census returns to show hew snail the population of this district is, then demanded: that. this . enrollment should be' :;. jjr . r ., :-. ENFORCED AT THE POrNT OF THE BAYONET. They called us traitors merely because we asked a scrutiny Into the action of the officials. At length, the case was so gross that aa adjustment was forced and the enrollment cut' down to about 20,000 men. Now this iranlied a DODulation of nearly 200,000 in the district. I ask you to look at the enrollment and the census returns as they confront each other. Both were defended as right ; one implied a popula tion ot nearly vsuu.uuu, and the other at a little more than ' 100,000. I ask yoa to look into the eolumns of journals, which defeDd au enrollment which if the census be honest called for more men than are living in the' district, including aliens, the aged, infirm and others not liable to dnty. Then look at these men again who come before you and declare that there are not as many voters in the district as before they said there were men liable to do military duty who now say that there were not one-third as many men to be enrolled as they insisted upon a few years since. They claim to stand before you as men fighting fraud, and yet they convict themselves of being guilty; either in upholding the enrollment or defending the census returns, of the foulest frauds recorded in the history of onr country. . . Let me also state that the vote in this district, which is paraded as a proof of fraud, is no greater ia proportion to the population than that of the county of uneida. This statement must show that it was my duty, as the Governor of this State, to ask that these outrages should ' be rectified, If there ever was a time when it was the duty of men to step forward and protest against cruelty and wrong, it was at that time. How were these demands for justice met by- those who are now charging fraud upon ethers f - They declared that these inequalities were ap parent, not real. . They urged that THE GROWTH OF THE. CITY' HAD BEEN - ' . , SO. GREAT, ' - " That this quota called for no more than its fair share of men. .They also insisted that the character of the population of the city of Jsew xorK was such that there was a larger 'proportion there than elsewhere liable to do military duty. Now, I ask yoa to bear ia mind that no one could be enrolled unless he was a citizen. Aliens were not included. He must also be a voter there, if he was of the right age. The enrollment of this class was of those between 20 and 35 years of age, together with those between 35 and 45 who were not married. . You see, then, that all of those enrolled' were voters, except the small class who were between the ages of 20 and 21. But this enrollment did not include all who were voters. Those who wr-erampt from duty for physical or other reasons, or those above the age of 35, who were married, were not in the enrollment. PROPORTION OF ENROLLED MEN AND VOTERS. - "' The number of voters in New York en rolled should be less than one-half of the anmber of those who had a right to vote at our elections.' We are not left to speculation upon this point: I find that the number enrolled in the county of Oneida is less than one-half of the voters here, and, so far as I have been able to examine the statistics, the. same rule holds good elsewhere. The number of voters enrolled in the city of New York lacked only six of 123,000. If we add the voters not enrolled, we will find that this enrollment shows that six years ago there were 256,000 within the limits of that eity. This was the showing of tbe Republican authorities. They protested it had been fairlv and oarefully made. The Re- - publican. speakers and journals uphold them in. this, lhey insisted tnat the great growth of that city and. the character of its population fully accounted for the apparent injrstioe. Now, as all those enrolled were voters, excepting those between the ages of 20 and 21, and as there was an equal number of voters not enrolled, the Republicans, in fact, insisted that they had proved that there, were 256,000 voters ia that city. But the largest vote ever given there was 156,000 which these men now say was excessive, forgetting their own violent assertions that six years ago the voters outnumbered this by a hundred thousand! - THE DESTROYING ANGELS OF THE RADI CAL CENSUS. Will not these destroying angels stay their hands awhile when they find that by sweeping out the population of New York, thev are convicting themselves of gross and cruel frauds in the past T Will not that leprous journal which by its statistics is depopulating whole districts in the city more swiftly than pestilence and famine have ever done, pause a moment in its unhealthy course and tell us how it could find so many men fit for military dnty, where there are so few voters and citizens f After undergoing the foulest reproaches, we succeeded daring the war in getting an adjustment of the quotas. They were put upon the basis of a population of less numbers than the Republicans claimed then and more than they admit bow. All agree that New. York has increased since 1864. How does it happen, then, that at that time it was so crowded with voters who were liable to do military duty, while now there are so few who have a rieht to the elective franchise f I have always supposed that the man who was fit to tight the battles of his country was fit to take part ia its elections. We are now told that the city is very populous for the purpose of fighting, but very thinly settled lor the purpose ot voting. THE TEMPER OF REPRESENTATIVE RAD ICALS. - I said at the outset that we should know the temper of men who ask us to make them our representatives in the councils of the State or Nation. We have seen how the official statements and pub- lie speeches put forth by the Republicans in ld64 and in 1870 overthrow and destroy each other. Let me now call your attention to the spirit and tone with which these statements were made. We have been denounced traitors from 1864 down to this time because we then objected to their official enumeration as unjust and excessive. Good men were taught to look upon us with distrust and hatred. - Ministers ot the ixospei were persuaded to put forth false statements, mingled in with the sacred truth of religion, and to upbraid us because we sought to shield a portion of our people from cruelty and wrong. I do not complain of things said or done in the ex citement and bitterness growing out of a condition of civil war. But 1 invoke fair-minded Republicans, whether clergymen or lavmen. to think well before they suffer those who have misled them in the past to mislead them again. They come before von. iu effect, saying all that we told you about the quotas of the city of New xorK was untrue. xHoveroneiesa, these statements served us a good turn We then asktd mm to denounce even man as m traitor who did not hold six years ago that ine population oj new xoru was much more lAoaasttiioa.-. . . v' :' . i" 1 -it ! BOARD OF E4t7A.I2ATIO.X : ' -., m. su b m ibb iTB vBai ( -9 wms viaw , r ora-A Tie, oXiricail,.. . :f ' -? t toe : it 1 The Members of the State ,.Bpai4;f, r-quauzation, elected, 9a. the 11th, efc; October, 1870, are as follows :. ' ! First D'lstrictHamQton : '". ' William Si Groesbece, J. Dan. Jones; 'it. T: Carson. Second District Butler aad Warren : Charles Ford.' -;...- r . 1 l .., - Third District Montgomery1 "and JPre-ble: David Barneti..-".i -m, ! F- - Fourth District Clemost and BtewnV William RorrDEBUSH.'Ji; -Jia i J . d f t Fifth District aeo,'ninti and Fayette'- John Hubtcy tSmUh.'! ' p 'a- " Sixth District Roes and ffigbland : Samuel E. Hibbek. iJ v;u a; ut3j 1 ' Seventh District Adams, Pike Scioto , and Jaeksen : W. Tv Washak: , Eighth i District : - Lawrenej (Jaflia, Meigs and Vintoa ft WUHam froth. : si 1 Ninth District Athens;' Hoakingaand Fairfield v Alexander Wbtte, , " Tenth District Franklin rand" Pickaway O. E Nil.R...':r';-j i ' Eleventh District Clarkey Champaign and Madisea: Charles PheUis. n j - Twelfth District"-Miamt, Darke and Shelby t S. A. Lrckey? v. .f .itt ' . ,n Thirteenth i District Loran-. - Union'.' Marion and Hardin-: James FuUinaton. 1 Fourteenth District-Washington! Mori gan and part of Noble: Enoch 8. Mcintosh: Fifteenth District Muskingum and Perry : - Daniel B.Ltnn. . Ir- - Sixteenth District-Delaware and Lick ing : Andrew, j. smith. " i Seventeenth and Twenty-eighth Die-, trict Koox, Morrow, Holmes and Wayne: William Barton, r ' t.- Eighteenth District Coshocton rand Tuscarawas: Richard McClelland, r. Nineteenth District Guernsey: Monroe and a part of Noble S.Wm Vau Meter. .Twentieth District .Belmont and Har-- rison : JSentamtn E. Dunaan. t i-.f . Twenty-first District Carroll i .and. Stark : Josiah C. Shaw. '1 '. Twenty-second District Jefferson and Columbiana : dwi Dutton. . Twenty-third. District Trumbull and Mahoning : Orfaw L. Waloott. Twenty-fourth District "Ashtabula, Lake and Geauga : Constantine C. Field. Twenty-fifth . District Cuyahoga : James M.Hoyt. ' ' '.' - - ' Twenty-sixth District Portage and Summit:- Henry S. Stevens. - t t , Twenty-seventh District Medina and Lorain : . Alvan D. Licey. . . ''-.. Twenty-ninth District Ashland' and Richland : Abraham Baughman". ' Thirtieth District Huron. Erie Sandusky and Ottawa : O.T. Minardi . Thirty-first District Seneca, Crawford and Wyandot: Andrew Dickson. Thirty-second District - Mercer. Au glaize, Allen, Van. Wert, Paulding, Defiance and Williams : Francis J. Lye, jr. Thirty-third District Hancock. Wood. Lucas, Fulton, Henry and - Putnam : Dresden W. M. Howard. ,.t . ' BanocjiATa nt smatx cap..i :4..-17 XeftiUicant tn Italict . , 17 THE . NEW tlABIHAIu - Saaaethiag ia . Bslatioa to Thrall la it a ' Doctor Carreer From the Cincinnati Enqulrstl . . There seems to have beea a little difficulty in defining , the status of William R. Thrall, the Columbus druggist,.. who is to suoceed Andy Hiokenlooper as Mar shal of -the Southern district. " Thrall is the son of .his father, and is not his father, as the liazeue innocently supposed, tie keeps a drug store in Columbus, and has attained the nre-eminentlv dignified po sition of Private Secretary- of Governor. Hayes. We met last evening the editor of one of the most staunch Republican papers ia Central. Ohio, and as this editorial gentleman seems to know .'mere about Thrall than, some editorial people in this city, we are inclined to make use 01 some ot his superfluous information. He mentions as an incident of Thrall's career the fact that Thrall went into -the army during the late clash." as a sur geon, but fox some reason didn't stay to see the " thing out. He came home to Columbus and brought with him a negro servant, whom he put into the service of his father. . The negro hadn't been there very long until, yielding to his native weakness, he stele the family . spoons. Thrall had him arrested, and the negro acknowledged his guilt. He didn't care so much about punishing., him, but he I. and so sent the colored kleptomaniac out to the country to work on a farm until his wages should liquidate the amount of the stolen property. Meanwhile, it became. necessary to draft some patriots for the war, and Thrall found that his name was going into the fatal wheel. He went to one of the substitute committee in one of the wards, and asked them how mnch they were paying for substitutes. ; He was informed that $250 was the current price for healthy ones. . He suggested that he had one which he would enter, for the races next day, and at bis urgent request a check for $250 was given him in advance. Next day he sent Barney McCabe out to the country to hunt, up his spoon-stealing negro, and paid him $25.00 for frightening the poor devil into the belief that it was remtentiary or army tor him. The negro consented to the latter, and was enlisted as Thrall's substitute and in Thrall's ward, when another $250 was planked down for him. These are facts which our Republican editor stands pre pared to prove. A report of the ease was made out and sent to the Department at Washington, and Thrall drew up a defense and forwarded it to the Attorney General. Nobody ever saw this document, and while they talk about the matter in Columbus, they have never been able to get at Thrall's side of the case. Our Republican editor says that he is m favor of Republicans holding all the offices in the country, but he thinks that this is a very bad appointment. Whea Charles Dickens died, among the many facts brought out by the con troversies which followed his death, was the information that the great humorist had rewritten for his children, in a sort of paraphrase of Scripture fer their better comprehension, the history of the life and lessons of the Christian's Saviour. Mr. Dicens himself alluded to it as an evidence of his love and veneration fox Christianity in a letter written oa the very day before his death, aud it was said that that curious and Interesting biography would be published-for the benefit of the children of ail the world. The friends of Mr. Dickens in Boston now have direct information from his family in England that one of his most positive and absolute injunctions was that the manuscript should never be published; and it never will be seen by any: one outside the author's home circle. It is asserted at St. Louis that a representation of Commodore Vanderhilt and other Eastern railroad magnates have secured a large tract of land opposite that city in Illinois, wish tiow. u w .vi!.i.;n mnnater stock vard. and that muii rvi. 1 " ? - ' . .. negotiations are progressing lor a similar tract on wn siu i " hundred acres of land will be required for the operatiomTof these gentlemen. : A number of small business houses In Cameron, Missouri, were burned Monday night, involving a loss of about $40,000, with an insurance of about $25,000. -.., - - 1 '- PAAX.X fs rATEEMAN. batss to tan TUJtm, um iojo?aiuul. - taa.0..i a-fOast.h..k ts co Xwo times 1 !1 Twomontha 15 00 Thro Bum. .;. ... 00 0ewMk.4e,.fK. Two weeks........ 5 00 T time months SO GO Kixmonua. 30 VO One year...." 50 0 Leoal notices. 80s oarJiao-aiat. and las tot each asjditianslinsertjsiu .Q ,,-.,. , , ... r-. , VEEK1T STifESlUlir Oatlme....:..r 50 TVomonths..;i...7 60 TwolimsoA.i.; 6of Three mooch-.. ..10 00 Three times .... 3 SSI Six months 15 00 One month. 4 nn One .....:.;. -.85 00 ayawaaaiasiaaaaawaiMMwwaawpwaaaaai 'papers are proposing, Seeretary .Cox, for President . Unfirtinateiyf he 'was born in Canada. . V . , " GeneraLT.A Morris has been appointed receiver of the adlahapoCs,' Lafayette and Cincinnati railroad by the Circuit Court, Indianapolis, "on application of several ef the stockholders of the road. d-..n httAP'lABc;-'!''' ' i.Jft 9 ThiaraambV'hreatlNdlilfrlast -Jot a 110 muur sola ibb cnous, uu ; v Xtecenbe .soled h shoe. The New York Oomsmicial Advertiser enaaanees that a Vewark nan's wife has had twins, and'that i is going : to have uor, arrested ior,rjeaang., j , j As George Pendleton has no son, a paragraph is going the ronnds to the effect that " A son of the Hon. George H. Pendleton is one of the defenders of Paris, f 1-531: ;ti nr. a i Ji . -:,,;, i A oosresponaeBt f th;e Epieopsl Meth- oowt,in arguing; fee the style' ef the for me Methodist ' preachers, J says it "We confess to-soma libiag for Iheilivisions of the xtld black rpreaeher of. , our- youth ' Bredern ' said -this a Id iIita nf th finnth '' 1 shall Tfirst explain de-text : secondly, I snail argue it; and . thirdly,, put on de rousements.' ' The ' rousements' were the grand characteristics of old Methodist preaotiagihi'i ,.,. i : ..: .Key. .John Moore, a Congregational clergyman: of, Philadelphia, . and Rev. Moses Hull, a Spiritualist, have beea recently .engaged in. discussing the subject 01 moueru . spiritualism, at Cincinnati. Mr. Moore acknowledges that bad spirits have the power of returning to earth. but repudiated altogether the idea of the food ones beiDg permitted to do like wise., jar., null suDmits per contra that both caff come.' and that without the in- fluenoe f-good spirits we shonld be reduced o . very ( unhappy- condition, in- deed.. ,s ., ;...,;,..,., ... . It was discovered .that soma one had entered the Clerk's., office of the Orange Circuit Court, at Paoli,' Indiana, on the 9th inst., ' but nothing seemed to have been disturbed, until last Thursday, when it was Jound that every book, including order book, fee book. atiDearance docket. - J udge's docket, record of executions, &c. , wmcn contained' ny reference 'to the cause of Eliza . Bowles : vs. William A. Bowles, for divorce wherein Mrs. Bowles had obtained a divorce, with $25,000 alimony, but the judgment remained unpaidhad beea mutilated, and the entire record of that cause out out and gone; also, -the entire files of the case, together with the execution,' which had been returned, and a transcript made out for the Supreme Court, but never used. DIED. AtcCUBET pa Wednesday morning, October 26th, EmtA Elizabeth, infant, daughter of William and. Elizabeth McCurry, aged nine months and ten days. . " ' ' . ; ' Tnneral son loos from Ko. 115 South street, oernerof Fourth" street, at o'clock P. M., today.. .Friends aad aeqiauntancea are invited to attend. . . , - . . 1 . NEWADVEETISEHEHTSJ MASONIC STATED' MEETING of Mt. Vernon Commanderv No. 1 K. T.. r this (Thursday) evening, October 27th, 1 Bv orriir. 1670, By order,. O. A. S, SENTER, Recorder. PROBATE NOTICE. SETTLEMENT . OF ACCOUNTS. The following accounts have been filed in the Probate Court of Franklin eonaty, Ohio, for settlement, aad will be for hearing on. Thursday, November 17th, 1870, to-wit: The first account of Joseph P. Brooks, Executor of John Brooks, deceased ; first acoount of M. P. Tone, Administrator of John C. Andrews, deceased; first account of James' Sim peen, Executor of William Parrish. deceased; nratacconnt of tr. S. Innis, Administrator of Samuel Wolf, deceased ; peoond aeosunt of C . E seriy, Guardian of L. E. Hammel i third account sf John Kilgore, Guardian of B. A. O'fiarra; final account ef C. Jacob, Ouardiam sf Albert M. and. -Xoretta U. Oury ; final account of Xra and George Carpenter, Executor. 27. Carpenter, deceased ; final account of . Amanda A. Price, Administratrix of Philip Price, deceased; final account of John Knipfer, Guardian sf Christens Welle; final acoount of Josiah Kinnear, Guardian of Emma Peal;' final account of Jacob E. Lowe, Guardian f- Sarah A-;rTnffman ; final account of John Wolf, Administrator of Jacob ' Wolf, deceased ; final account of John A. Keller, Administrator of Benjamin Sutler, deceased; final account of Horses Wilson. Administrator of K. D. Dunbar. deeeaaed ; final aoooont of John Helpman, Guardian of Jane Allen ; final account of John Help- man, ixuaroiau oi uaviu 1 1. fry. i tiuoJM .rutin, fro Date Judge. , Columbus, Ohio, October 25th, 1870. :eeRditAwit" - ' - VTOTICE. MY WIFE, CAROLINE a3 ' MILXEE. "having left my bed snd board, all persons ars hereby notified that X will not pay any bills she, may contract. occat-ji " i johjm u. .Mri.JL.iSK. NB.KELLYf ARCHITECT 4 StPEKHTEXDEXT - OFFICE Ho. 18 EAST BBOAD ST., . ' c p 'tlxm: b.xj 8,- o. Plans. Specifications and Estimates for every deseriptaoa of building executed in the most improved manner and shortest notice. Ajomtect oi mgn Bcnoot ouuaing, tr. nay-den'e new building and B. . Smith's new residence, at Columbus, Ohio. sept30-d3m LEATHER, ETC. pATTERSON & MEEK, .-..' '..-Importers aad dealers in French & German Calf Skins, '" SHOE- FINDINGS, Saddlery Hardware, Collars, Whips, Horse Blaalteta,. laaaero Tools, 011, tildes, Pelts, 'Farsy" Fly Nets, etc. No. 1 QWYinri BLOCK, Town St, ..'',.. Colaamoas, Oaio. 1el4-eod3mo HOB.SE BTiATTKETS. H OESE BLANKETS. LAP ROBES, 'BTJFI'AL.O robes, V ALASKA ROBES, , ; . "WOLF ROBES. ' A great variety, all styles and prices, . Wholesale and, Retail. .u Wurta ' : p. HATDE BON, Tt "v llrw 24 and 26 Broad street. o&l.thtl-' -: rags..: R AGS WANTED. "l'WO XftnTDBlCD THOOSANiy nonnds of Country Bags wanted, for which Cash will Le paia oy .- -mus. hibjbisim uo.. Mane So Sort HiA St, Columbus, O. oct2a-sod-Aw. . . Foerster's lmoa Crackers

... Vfl:v " a ..Ci yioto:i;:ic ;:TTn.'Ji - - - - .: -i .---?'-n.:M ff r:- i .... . . 01: .6 , " A it I 1 -N , -.AIIT A CO. -i . - . -,. j ' f r J. . '1 AV.E3 KH.L3, t . - - .- . : Karros ; CFFIfE, to. 74 KwtyCfrk Street. , . .'. Sabserijitloa Bte, ' . Da;iv,bTmail,e -', i T-Wklv...i...r SO wr 4 Wl 'fcsejujf Sou C . W nnwir I dubs of ti - j-t inoc'fi .et twtv CO Lu .thinners invariably iiunui ., ,,'.i IBS OFFICIAL" VTE. . . ,s "vf, Eav, fall 0Edl vote ef "Ohio . last, on Slate officers. . .The returns ', fcru tbe renjainihjr connty-i-HaiTiaoB were received at the Secretary of State'i , ae31ce yeatarday. The footing 'up made by the official arejaa follow :-SIECRCTART OF STaTV. T.ita! niAAA.... . . 4i9 rr , Imm R. ShTMreo4 S21.T09 . W uiiatn aelaley SMS 015 - JaytA01.. i 863 Sherwood mt Heialey 16,64 ,-.-. t T .,rJLTGI OF StTPEKMB COCBT. ItUlltU,... ..A-J..1.4. to....i..4S,10 OeorCT W. M rlveine..... !. K. A. F irrmm . ! I. Stewart t.eio wtunwBuriu ................ K,e93 fKMflTROIXKB OP THB TRSASOST. io . i-WiHiaT. VMaoau. il.7! r .WLion oyer Hk41ob ...;. 17,425 i , .. l MKMBKK BOARD OF PCBUC WOBK8. Toialvoto... V. 42950 - Phtlip T. Hening ;.S?,W Willi Spo-r u-.J'.,Oii( ICavea a. Cjiaa . -ajxiZ ' 'BBlretnf over Sprncer 15,725 v' -'i '- .The. highest vote tin year, on Seere-' - "" tary of State, 429,587, is ft omftller rote than has been agt in the State aiaoe 1865, Then Gcacral Cox irao chosen Governor over General Morqaj. and ia even less tbaa the Vote at the Presidential election iavlfi6a.-hy..XJ,00a -Compared with the vote of the preceding two years, it U ae follows ': " " : 1ST0. ; SOi.Ol Denooratia... KopuW lean . . ..S0,2I ' Tsmparaao - W.I Total vote 3 18, 8 463,340 489,587 The Temperance party is the only or- . gun ration that appears to be on the la " cseaje. While Hhe' ether parties . fall sadly behini their vote of last year, the Prohibitionists have more than qaadrn pled their strength. If they keep on at '. s ' this rate for a few years longer, the whole State of Ohio will be drinking water. Their opportunity is apparent to the dullest politician, and wo all know the ;a temperance organisation, comprises some of the shrewdest political intellects in the State, chaps like Joky B. "sly fello The Eadical majority on Secretary of , ,. State. is Bade ep entirely of negro votes. That element is mnch stronger ia the . ! .'State than was generally apposed it " would be, and every colored individual ' entitled to the ballot cast his "suffering" at least onee, even if he did not repeat. . It will require some extraordinvry con- ' vulsion in the natnral world, an earth- qaake say, or the possible candidacy of Faxow Doughs, Dxacok Foindbxtkb, or Captain Kko Brown of the Fusileers, in the political arrangements, to induce " aoch another fall tarn out of the race, or such unanimous voting one way. Of course, we except the contingency of ' - the sueeeas of the Sixteenth Amendment which will admit the colored sisters to all the sweets of political strife, -to tin manifest iiuf m tiuuatu JimiuiitJuu f ' -' -f their seal iat the revival eeaaoo. The , , subject grows overpowering, and we out ' 'it short with this extract from the Enquirer, justly lashing those Democrats .wio, thought lea? of, thuir sacred privilege " than Pomp or Cesar of a more -able eompUxjon v "At the past election.when 30,000 blacks voted, more than 1UO.000 whites neglected to avail themselves, of the privilege. For this enormous neglect to vote no apology whatever, no exonerating plea, can be made. If our political mis-government is not groat enough at prea-U ent-if the oppression upon the people is ot sufcient to induoe them to seek to avert it it is difficult to imagine any circumstance in the future that will do so. As to despairing of being able to do s so, it ia a most unmanly and cowardly sentiment, being worthy of slaves rather than of freemen. The Democracy of Ohio - in this election have been especially unpardonable. Had - f i they oa to- the polls as they did two - - years ago for Secretary of State, they would have given 250,000 votes, and elected onr ticket by 29,000 majority. Their vote for Seyuoar iar Preaideot was 17,000 snore than the BepablieaM have now gives, and for Mx. Pendleton for Governor last year, it was 7,000 in excess of tbe present UxiUial figure. Kvea eix years eo they gave a larger , ' vote to Usiuril ieCieiian for President than they have now. A fine opportunity l.r securing political ascendency in Ohio was aever before so wantonly thrown , -way." THE NEWS. ' ' 4 It is nnderstood that ' Hon. Tuornas Hayne has declined the Democratic ' nomination for Congress in the Chicago district. .-"'". ' 'f The Intersal lieveuus bureau has issued a tax mannel for cigar mannfacter-ers in order to guard against frauds, and to insure the enforcement of the law. . j lion. Charles Sumner delivered one ef a Lyceum course of lectures, Tuesday night, on The duel between France and Germany, with its lesson to civilization." . i,- At Philadelphia, yesterday, the Bed Stockings scored 7 and the Atlanties 11. The Naturalization Convention between the United States and Great Britain was .yesterday othciaUy published. so- Archibald G ' Lectie, of the firm of , r f . Lackifr & f Co-j distillers and, liquor J -. dealers,;;f, Cjiwago, whila . engaged, on Monday last, at Loda, Illinois, in potting a distillery in operation, fell into a large . tab ailed wiJa boUiag water, and was so badly scaldoathat bo died in a few hours. ' The First ya"tTphalr Bank of Grafton, ' MaaaachnsetU,' was robbed onTnesday .night e all Itti.jToudft iU watchman, Mr. ,.v-siJaiels,'liaviBC fi .-bean gagged and .. - baodeoffed. - There were five men en-4 , ..: gaged In the robbery. The amount taken ' is not yet stated, but included all the property of priraUT depositors, and is estimated at between $200,000 and $300,000. '""' 5 'A match has been made between two . three-year olds tr $25,000 a aide, and $10,000 forfeit, between a horse to be imported 'from 'England" and an American horse, both to be named within a month. The race is to be a dash of two- miles, to be run at the fall meeting of Jerome v.rV in 171. Tn rjuienither horse is net ..'JIT 2 nmnieQ within the time, a forfeit of fiiOO la to be paid, and the match is off. vTb appeal to the bullet was taken ia . r ' Cnmberiaad, Md on the 17th, by Harry , C. Black, wha shot Colonel W. W. Mc- ' ' " Ka':2. Jr.. aead with revolver, ea Balti- ' " ' mhw street, aa he passed him, and then , : - troirtf nomwr said to the awe-striok- eu spectators: fcIhave killed theG d ." A-t cceaodrel who rained my sister, and . here's another ball for the man who says '. didn't do rights He then- immediate ly aorrendered tumself. and ts now in jail. . . 1 , ,11 ' . . I J i ' i 1 i '' ' 1 t . - I . .- . . I . , I I . L ' 9 ' ' ' ! VOLv XXXIX the wis ii Erncrc. Interview Arranged between Thiers v and Bismarck - Germans Beport Several .Victories) on Saturday Keported Bd Kepublican Troubles at Majraaillefl Failure of Bona? artists to Negotiate through Baz&iae. ' I , t J - 'r 1 i- ! . .- - 'i ; .- : . -to i thikrs xna bismakcb:. j FB1IICB Loxdox, October 26. The Pmlt If Vatelle annonnces that a meettog between Thiers and Bismarck has bee arranged, the Government at Toara having aooepted the principles of the armistice. : Troeha made aaother attempt"to force an outlet near Ivry on Monday, but' Was repnlsed. - ' . . '; , . xtr LOAK RUMORED KVaCIUTIOX Of - OHU1K8. I 1 Tours,-Xtetober 26. An extra edition of the Jfesifevf-appeared last evening, con taining a decree for the issue of a loan of two hundred and fifty mHliona on Thurs day, the 27th inst-, under the title of the loan for the national defense.""; News is confirmed that Garibaldi has successfully attacked the Prussians. Advices from Marseilles show that dis orders are still prevalent there. : Even the authority of Esquires is now denied. At Lyons all is quiet.- The National Guard have greatly assisted the local officers in preserving order. It was rumored last evening that the Prussians were evacuating Orleans yes terday. - ' ENGAGEMENTS ON THE AGEXOX. Carlsruhe, October 26. rhe Gazette, ef this city, , last evening published a dispatch from General Boyer to the Duke of Baden, containing the ; following intelligence : On Saturday, the 22d, several victori ous engagements occurred on the river Ageoon, at Yoray, Cuesey, Anzzou and Gennerville. The French losses were se vere. Battalions of th First, Third, Fourth and Fifth Baden regiments took part in the actions. The German losses were generally insignificant. The fol lowing is a complete list of the casualties suffered by the Baden troops: Killed and wounded, 38; cap tared officers, 12; rank and file, 200. RUSSIA MOVEMENTS. London, October 26. The Germans on their westward march gutted the city of Besanoon, in. the Department of Doubs. They took thirty-seven carriages filled with wounded French soldiers. The German, troops are apparently concentrating at Bheims. The French eommander at Verdun has sent a defiant message to the Prussians. The Germans refrain from attacking Amiens. Their troops at Bauvais and Soissons are retiring towards Mezieres. The town of Chateau d'Un has been literally destroyed by the Prussians. - NEGOTIATIONS WITH BAZAIME. tober 26. German negotiations with Bazaine for the capitulation of his army continue, notwithstanding - the disapproval of the French Governmen t. The military" authorities before Pans have successfully examined the defenses of that city by means of balloons yThe Paris and Orleans railway has been nearly restored.. The Prussians refuse further paroles to captured French officers, because it has been ascertained that many thus. released have resumed service in the French army. RED REPCBUCAM TROUBLES GERMANS . STTXX IN ORLEANS. London, October 26. Troubles at Mar seilles are increasing'. The Bed Repub licans are largely ia the ascendant, and in open rehetli against the Republican authorities at Paris and Tours. They haws evw ausiiiso far as to offer a reward for Gamhotta's head. Gesiave Flourens has been finally dis charged. ' Dispatches from Tours, Tuesday even ing, state that the pending- peace negoti ations are due to the initiative taken by Great Britain. A free pass for Thiers to enter Paris is not expected for a week or ten days. .",' Notwithstanding the French report of the German evacuation of Orleans, it has been ascertained that the eity is still oc cupied- . ' ,. There are no indications of an immedi ate advance on Blois and Vendome. A YOUNG GIRL CREATES AN EXCITEMENT. London, October 26. Dispatches from Tours announce that a young girl of that city is creating a most -intense excite ment by an imitation of the example of Joan of Arc. Hundreds of enthusiastic persons joined her' standard. Her appeals for recruits are said to be singu larly pathetic and eloquent.. , t ' ' RUSSIAN PRESS. St. Petersburg, October 26. The Journal (official organ) hopes the discussion of the conditions of peace will not be mixed up with the discussion of armistice. The Constituent Assembly Is the only competent power to decide that question. The writer hopes farther that in the pending armistice, in deference to humanity, Paris may be revictualed.' '' KCIK AROUND PARIS. London, October 26. Paris is girdled with ruin. Tne country outside of the walls for miles is desolate. The United States steamer Franklin has been repaired, and left Portsmouth for Spithead, where she will take ammunition, etc " BAIXOONLNO. ' t TOURS, October 26. Yesterday a bal loon which the authorities were trying to dispatch to Paris was carried against a tree and badly damaged. Another enort will be made to-morrow. A messenger from the Government, who has Import ant news to communicate, will essay the hazardous experiment of visiting Paris ' '; THE NEW LOAN "London, October 26. The books for subscriptions to the new . French loan have been owned is seventy out of eighty-nine Departments of France, nine- tecn"beiog occupied by Germans. ', ' SIEGE OF PARIS, The Prussians again announce that, fire will be opened on Paris on the 29th inst One thousand stoves have been or dered for the huts of the Prussians be sieging Metz. 4 ; , i "-'OOLtJMBUS, OHIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER Genera! Cambriell otaiins a victory for the French at ChatiHorr le Due. Ji . , The French regard 'England's last ef fort at mediation- with: 'extreme distrast F .ULCER OF THE: BONAPARTIST3. Loxdou, Oetober 26. A dispstsh has beea received by the .Herald -eorretpand- ent at "Bertitf, front' .Jltz,1wTilc5 states that all the endeavors & the par pr yit Rati anof lata tjirrtn tj Tt&zain. Iiv. iwhlnh I rftce could be restored on the basis of Ml.!.- x- 1 'T i I . - hun x.ui;icn uwuiuiu aDvu, ua v c been abandoned, AU hopes of pece are therefore now at an- end, and peace can' only now be. gained Jj inleryentton of neutral ixiwers.-4 ilJ' iJ - neutral powers. lBrsMA. r BBCSSEts, October 2&T7Aconerence between Bismarck and the representatives of various goufhern States of Germany regarding terms, pt unification has already' begun." The Bavarian representative announced that hia GoTemmsnt desired a separate mTTrtaryTm(Tgef"and special taxes, as well a vpwtal postal yet vice. He arreed in case these points are conceded, that her deputies in Jthi .Fed eral Parliament shall net partlclpare-in d soussions on the Federal budget. It ia J not thought these terms will be accepted. POLITICAL, PRISONERS RELEASED. Berlin, October 26. Herr Jacohy and seven other political pesoprj $ave been releaeed. 1 ''''' I - ' .. ITAE. - j THE JOBEIGX MINISTER OS THE ' PAPAL . ' -BULU.'' .'t e .i tt 1 Florence, October ,2CV The J e. 3finister ef Foreign Affairs. a hjfj of. '.circular letter to representatives- .ot Italy in foreign countries, denying the assertions made in the Ute PapaLbnll,' relative to reasons for dissolving the Ecumenical Council.'-' The Minister says Italy has not raised, nor will she. raise . any;'' obstacle whatever, either to the re-aasewibling of the Council, or perfect freedom of its discussions, i" EXPULSION OF B9NAP ARTISTS DEMANDED. Brussels, October 26. Thisbity continues to be the seat of action 'of the Bonapartisby intrigues The Independence Beige still denounces1 these violations of international law, and ealla : upon the Government to expel the culprits. f fl . ' XOYAX. MATRIMONY, "v) ! London, October 26It i officially an nounced that the Queen, yesterday, at the Council at Balmoral, sanctioned the contemplated marriage of the Princess Louise and Marquis of Lome. ' . TUB MISSING BOATS OF THE CAMBRIA. ; London, October 26.-5 P. M. There are no tidings of the missing boats of the steamer Cambria, aad it is 'now thought they went down with the ship. NEW YORK; ;'. " Military Pre walioniJii r.Hl e clioa Alloraer Cleaeral Akcrataa Qaarters at the Astav Moaoe Biejata Sjafaatry at Now York Other Hilltarr Forces Will Vimdl it Caavoaleat to he Near Nothiaa HootrB ftsaa the Sheaaaoteah lIlIoaloBarf Iteaas. '.'. '' '" , ' FEDERAL PREPARATIONS PORTRE ON TROL OF NEW YORK tLECTIONB. ..'.i- Saw Toax, Oetober 86, 1876.. Attorney General Akermsn has estab- llished hia headquarters at the Astor House, where be will remain till after' the election to respond te all questions that may arise. .He is instructed to sea that f all the rights of the citizens are respected, and that the authority ef the United States Government is maintained. He was in consultation with United1 States Senator Conkling yesterday,, and the Senator subsequently remarked that the determination was to enforce the aot"of Congress at all hazards., ', . ' i No doubtful or questionable power will be assumed by the officers, but they will enforce such processes and provisions as they are assured they will be sustained in in the execution of the law&i The preparations for the purpose are being perfected every day, and there will be no lack of authority to back up the officers. The Eighth United States Infantry will arrive to-night. This regiment ia about six hundred strong, and will be reinforced by , four hundred ' recruits, who await its arrival. - It will find quarters on one of the islands in East Biver, and when the emereenev is over.' thev will proceed to the Canadian frontier, and go into winter quarter. 'j . . : j Other forces ot considerable strength will find it convenient to quartet In the vicinity of New York during the next two weeks, and though lew people will probably ever see them, the fact that thev are on hand will be consoling to one party, and will exercise a wholesome re straint upon the evil doers of the other. The United states omeers cnargea witn the dutr of enforcing the law of Con gress for tbe preservation of the purity of the ballot mean business this .time, and the Government means to sustain them. ... ' The Attorney General telegraphed to the President that matters were quiet in the city, and that the resistance on Mon day was not of a serious character-. w Secretarv JKobeeon lelt this oitv on Monday. The naval forees. at Brooklyn and upon the waters of New York , harbor wilt oe neui in reaaiuess to essuts me oi- fioers in erving process end in enforcing the laws. There is bo backwardness anywhere. " .; ; : ' ' '" THE SaKNANDOAH NOT UEARD fROM. No intelligence has yet been, received of the arrival in European waters of the corvette Shenandoah, Commander Clark H. Wells, which sailed from, Boston on the 2d or 3d day of September Jast. She is now over fifty days out, and has taken a long passage to eastward tor tnis sea son oi tne year, it is quite prooauie sne may nave been tne ship seen cusmastea by an English ship about the 12th. of September, i ' ' - )!;' About eight thousand special Deoutv Marsnais will ne sworn in by election aay. ...... BIBLE UNION. . Y The American Bible Union held their twenty-first anniversary to-day. ""The expenditures for the' year were $53,567, and receipts ow,ow, leaving a balance due the treasurer. ' REGENERATION. In the Episcopal Board, of Missions, Bishop Whitehouse presiding, there, was a long discussion on a resolution et.tain- ing the work oi regenerating colored peo pie, which was finally adopted, and $50, 000 devoted to the object. A eenimitteo was appointed to induce railroad managers to pass missionaries for. little or nothing to Uieu nelos oi labor. . "" "" INSURANCE DECISION, A verdict was given to-day "agaihst' an insurance company,, under a charge: of tbe Judge, 'tnat an oral eontraat of iu suranoe was binding, to tne amount of 164.000. in favor ot tne owners of the 1 wrecked steamer boeridan. (V efNblNNATi;; ; .-.It''-. '- . . - : 1 " 11 f Procardia t the Natieaal Cayiaal . - if . r. I CisnisH.a. ; . .' " CnfcrATi . Ootutrtt 6j 1870. "The Capital Convention reassembled to Bear read the letter ef J. W.Forney, but the document was hot at hand.' ;"Tbe committee on Resolutions reported in favor of the removal of the Capital to the Mississippi .Valley, to some point as near as possible to the center of population, territory, prod action and transpor tation, with reference to the future as welltaji thf .ntesent . demands of the nation ; also, opposing further appropria tions for new buildings in the District of woiumDia; reanirmuig tne resolution or tne st. Louis Convention, ana reoom-mendiug. the- appointment of a commit tee to memorialize Congress .at Its next session in favor of the appointment of a joint resolution authorizing the appoint ment oi commissioners to examine., the quest uisy ef , nnoval and re-location of the Capital) and to report at an early dayi J A Hi..', A f v. . . Mr. W. M. Beach, of Ohio, 'offered " a substitute, declaring that-the-ittia tor the removal was uncalled for and unwise, and proposing a tine die adjourn ment of the Convention. ' A discussion followed, participated in by Hollaui, of Kentucky ; Forshey, of lexaa ; Keaves, ot Muwonri ; Moonlight, of Kansas ; Ambrose, of Nebraska : Scott. of Washington Territory; Coggswell, of neorasKa; wayne vrriswoia, ot unio; Coy, of Illmois : Moore, of Ohio : Beards- ley, of Iowa; and Black, of Illinois , in favor, ana wuiiama, of Ohio, opposed. Mr. Beach's substitute was 'lost, there being only two votes in the affirmative. Mr. Williams, of Ohio, moved to designate Cincinnati as the place for the Capi tal, bat withdrew his motion. Oa motion, an Executive Committee, consisting of one front Each State and Territory represented was appointed . to take charge of the whole subject and oall a Convention, and employ other means as deemed best. iA vote of approval of the action of Con gress in refusing to make appropriations for further improvement to public buildings in the District of Columbia, was passed, and the Convention adjourned ZEOPEBANCB. Oaeaiaar Meaaioa of the Ohio mate Tcaptraan Alliaaee. SIouiCT Vsksoh, October 93, 1870. Correspondence of the Ohio Statbsmah. Thei Oho. State. Temperance Alliance met this evening, agreeably with notice published throughout the State, in Good Templars' Hall, with a fair attendance of delegates," Rev. J. W. Osborn, President of the State Alliance-, ia the Chair. J. S. McClelland was appointed Secre tary,' and the convention opened with prayer by Bev. D. C Hervey. " The President then delivered an earnest and powerful address, which was listened to withthe closest attention and the deepest interest. He was succeeded by Judge T. C. Jones, of Delaware, in rather a legal and argumentative address, which was able and well received; and after tome romarks made hy different delegates the convention adjourned untilto-morrow morning at 9 o'clock. --- - - Deuqatk. OHIO NEWS. Messrs, K. A T, Mears, of Steuben ville, narrowly ' escaped serious loss by fire Tuesday afternoon. ., l4v. Mr. Hall, of Mansfield, has been called to the pastorate of the First Presbyterian Cliarch. at Springfield, with a salary of $2,500 and parsonage furnished gratia. . The naw church edifice, recently built by the United Brethren, at Lagonda, will be dedicated on. Sunday, November 6th, at half-past ten o'clock in the morning Biohop Glossbrenner is expected to officiate. - - - A boy named Riohard Curtner was in stantly killed about a half mile west of Troy at 5 oclock Tuesday evening. He whs haulms a load of wood, when from some accident he fell off and the wheels of the wagon passed over him, crushing him in a terrible manner. A meeting was held in the Board of Trade rooms at Dayton, Tuesday evening, to coasider propositions for an air line coal road from New Lexington, Ohio, and another between Dayton and the coal and iron 'fields of Jackson county The Jackson county coal ia represented very pure, Hard coal, and is now used for' smelting iron without coking. it is a snaic - coat and lnexnaustible. Among the advantages spoken of, was the tact ' that Dayton was on an air line drawn between Chicago and Symmes Creek, where a connection would be made . with .the groat ChesaDeake and Ohio road to Norfolk, Virginia. The en- Sneeringof the line between Dayton and illaboro is now going on, and the osti; mated cost to the people of Montgomery and Clinton counties is about four hundred , thousand dollars. If the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad adopt this line, the assurance is given that they will furnish the iron and rolling stock for it. The long-contested Jumel will case in the New York Courts afforded an opportunity a few days ago for a passage at arms between the counsel George, the Count -Joannes, for the plaintiffs, and Charles O'Conor, the celebrated counsel or, for the- defendant. The Count, after reading his complaint, which required two hours, and the defendant's answer, which consumed another, made aa open ing speech, embracing biography, histo ry, skilled mimicry, eulogy, poetry, rhapsody and impassioned appeal, introduced documentary evidence, when Mr. O'Conor bemsr asked ir be bad anything to say, quietly replied that he had nothing. "You can't say anything," spoke up the Count, with fiery veuemence ; , you took salvage of five per cent, on the making of that will ; you got fifty thousand dollars for your part of the work." "That's a lie," with coolly impassive deliberation, an swered air. U'Conor, rising to his feet, "like many other lies that have been uttered by the connsel to-day." The Court dismissed the 'plaintiff's case. A telegram from Key West, 25h, says: Daring the hurricane that blew here from he northeast, op , the 20th inst;, there were six shipwrecks in the harbor. The United States steamer Tuscarora, after having broken from three anchors, went to sea. xne rest ot tne squadron with- stood tbe gale. The Tuscarora is safe. The shipping at Havana was badly dam. aged. communication by telegraph lines was interrupted tor two days. A man named A. T. Nicol shot himself three times in the head with a pistol, on the rear platform of a ladies' car of the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad, near &taunteur "a., last Saturday morning, fatally wounding himself. Grief at the sudden death of his wife, during his temporary absence, on Thursday night, led to this act. His wife's remains were on the same tram, she having been on visit at the time of her death. If'- Tf VOTERS AND SOLDIERS, Facts Bearlni on the Coming Elec ; tioniaXew- York, i Turn MaiNH. Btotwce a Baalical KaraHawat for Vlfhtiaa; Parpoaes a Baaical Coawaa for Tollaa B eT ytACISa, : i. Ex-Governor Seymour, of New York, delivered a remarkable speech in Oneida county, of that State, last week, which is attracting a great deal of attention in the East. It was in reference to the charge that the vote in the city of New York is so fraudulent and excessive that it has wrongfully changed the result of elections, and placed political power in the hands of the Democratic party. In the first place - Governor Seymour showed, that even by the recent Radical census, which gives New York city a population of little less than a million of sonls, the largest vote ever cast in the city 156,000 in 1868 was not equal to the proportion of. voters to' population ia counties where the Republican party is largely in the eaceadant. "If," said Mr. Seymour, " the vote in the city of New York, in proportion to its numbers, as shown by the census, shows frand, then, unless the census will show that New York has more than five millions and a half of people, the Republican districts ef this State are steeped in fraud to their very eyelids." r i Referring to the reoent census in New York city, Mr. Seymour pointed to the fact that the census-takers had not only a moneyed interest in doing their work carelessly, but they had also a strong political reason, which was the expediency of reducing the population of a Democratic stronghold, and thus depriving it ot its rightful representation in Congress. ' , "l. '" But the crowning point of theex-Governor's careful Bpeech was his comparison of the census of New York, in 1870, with the military enrollment in 1864, both made by the agents of the Federal Government. In the one ease tne policy of the Federal autkoritiet a inn to reduce thepopulation to a to diminish Democratic representation in Congress. In the other, it was to increase the population so as to call an unjust proportion of drafted mm from a Democratic city. That's the whole story. In point of deliberate villainy it has never been approached in the history ef the Union.' It shows the Radical leaders engaged ia it to be a gang of the most unprincipled and reckless scoun drels American politics has ever vom ited forth. , And the reader must not for get that the Federal Administration is now engaged iu aiding in the final consummation of this stupendous villainy, and to carry out their plans its office-holding " hirelings in the metropolis threaten to carry bloodshed and devas-iatiwi tntothe-Btieeta oftbo CttJ'. We annex the portion of ex-Governor Seymour's speech in which he exposes the Radical villainy that New York has large population for drafting purposes, but an unexpected and unreasonably small population for voting purposes! .... CENSUS OF NEW YORK COMPARED WITH THE ENROLLMENT OF 1864. - Those who have tried to fasten the charge , of fraud upon the ' Democratic party of the State of New York have not only failed in this, but they have unwittingly unmasked a monstrous wrong of which they themselves have been guilty. This question about the population of the eities of New York and Brooklyn and of Democratic districts is not a new one. It agitated this State a few years since and was tbe subject ot a bitter controversy, in their haste to denounce others; in their seal to draw false conclusions from the census returns, they forget that they are bringing forth proofs that they were guilty of crimes of ten-fold deeper dye than those they untruly charge upon others. During the war an enrollment was made ef those who were liable to do military duty. The government never did an act more grave, more solemn, or one which called for more unquestionable fairness than this. The sac redness of its purpose, the preservation of our Union, should have invested it with a species ot sanctity. It was a measure which touched the lives of our people, the happiness of their homes, and which was to carry death and mourning into so many family circles. It was to be . A GREAT LOTTERY OF LIFE And the thought that there could be fraud, falsehood and injustice ia its con duct shocks every mind that Is. not dead to Justice and to mercy. But when this enrollment was made, it was found to be so unequal and partisan that, with others, I deemed it a duty to look into it. I will give you a tew-of the results ef that scrutiny. I beg every man within the sound of my voice to recall to his mind the statements which were made in the controversy which grew out of that sub ject. I ask yon all, without regard to your political views, to read again what was said that time in political speeches and in political journals. It was found under this enrollment, when a call was made for three hundred thousand men, that nine Democratic Congressional districts which, at that time, gave one hundred andV eighty-six thousand votes, were called upon to furnish more than forty thousand men, while sixteen Republican districts, with a vote of more than three hundred and fifty-three thou sand, were charged with but thirty-three thousand, lite districts lorced to send this excessive amount were mostly in the cities of New York and Brooklyn. The first nine Congressional districts, which comprise these cities and adjacent counties, with a population at that time rated at 1,218,949, were called upon for 26,166 men, while Massachusetts, with ten Congressional districts and a population then rated at 1,231,006, had to furnish only 15,126. At the same time the quotas of Vermont and New Hampshire, with a population of 641,171, with six Congressional districts, gave only 7,099 men, while two districts in the eity of New York, with a population ot only 283,229, were called upon for 7,b&3 men. STARTLING FACTS. I ask yon to notioe some startling facts about the Sixth Congressional District of New lorfc. You have, in the flew xorK Jriiase and in other papers, statements which show that in many wards in this district the vote is unduly large in comparison with census returns. These statements are put forth as clear proofs of election frauds. Now, if the census returns of these wards are not false, the Republican party and its leaders have been guilty of the foulest fraud ever practiced on a people. B v the census returns, there are only 118.200 nooDle in the Congres sional district, showing a tailing off of more than 16,000 since loon, the only district in the city in which it is claimed there is a loss of population. I his is a Demooratio district. Now, in the enroll ment of 1864, there was charged against this district more than 30,000 men, as liable to military duty, when in the county of Oneida, which is said to have 27, 1870. about the same population, only 9,190 were onroueo. More men were enrolled ia the .Sixth Congressional district as liable to military duty than in any other tuauriuk iu uui state or nation, nearly three times as many as were claimed, of any Republican district of this State, although many of them exceeded it in numbers by the census returns. There ooald not have been 30,000 men liable to enrollment ia this district unleei it had a population of about 300,000. , When this was pointed out by me, it wat .said ia answer, not only that the district had a large population, but that it was rapidly increasing ia a umbers. - Those who are parading tbe census returns to show hew snail the population of this district is, then demanded: that. this . enrollment should be' :;. jjr . r ., :-. ENFORCED AT THE POrNT OF THE BAYONET. They called us traitors merely because we asked a scrutiny Into the action of the officials. At length, the case was so gross that aa adjustment was forced and the enrollment cut' down to about 20,000 men. Now this iranlied a DODulation of nearly 200,000 in the district. I ask you to look at the enrollment and the census returns as they confront each other. Both were defended as right ; one implied a popula tion ot nearly vsuu.uuu, and the other at a little more than ' 100,000. I ask yoa to look into the eolumns of journals, which defeDd au enrollment which if the census be honest called for more men than are living in the' district, including aliens, the aged, infirm and others not liable to dnty. Then look at these men again who come before you and declare that there are not as many voters in the district as before they said there were men liable to do military duty who now say that there were not one-third as many men to be enrolled as they insisted upon a few years since. They claim to stand before you as men fighting fraud, and yet they convict themselves of being guilty; either in upholding the enrollment or defending the census returns, of the foulest frauds recorded in the history of onr country. . . Let me also state that the vote in this district, which is paraded as a proof of fraud, is no greater ia proportion to the population than that of the county of uneida. This statement must show that it was my duty, as the Governor of this State, to ask that these outrages should ' be rectified, If there ever was a time when it was the duty of men to step forward and protest against cruelty and wrong, it was at that time. How were these demands for justice met by- those who are now charging fraud upon ethers f - They declared that these inequalities were ap parent, not real. . They urged that THE GROWTH OF THE. CITY' HAD BEEN - ' . , SO. GREAT, ' - " That this quota called for no more than its fair share of men. .They also insisted that the character of the population of the city of Jsew xorK was such that there was a larger 'proportion there than elsewhere liable to do military duty. Now, I ask yoa to bear ia mind that no one could be enrolled unless he was a citizen. Aliens were not included. He must also be a voter there, if he was of the right age. The enrollment of this class was of those between 20 and 35 years of age, together with those between 35 and 45 who were not married. . You see, then, that all of those enrolled' were voters, except the small class who were between the ages of 20 and 21. But this enrollment did not include all who were voters. Those who wr-erampt from duty for physical or other reasons, or those above the age of 35, who were married, were not in the enrollment. PROPORTION OF ENROLLED MEN AND VOTERS. - "' The number of voters in New York en rolled should be less than one-half of the anmber of those who had a right to vote at our elections.' We are not left to speculation upon this point: I find that the number enrolled in the county of Oneida is less than one-half of the voters here, and, so far as I have been able to examine the statistics, the. same rule holds good elsewhere. The number of voters enrolled in the city of New York lacked only six of 123,000. If we add the voters not enrolled, we will find that this enrollment shows that six years ago there were 256,000 within the limits of that eity. This was the showing of tbe Republican authorities. They protested it had been fairlv and oarefully made. The Re- - publican. speakers and journals uphold them in. this, lhey insisted tnat the great growth of that city and. the character of its population fully accounted for the apparent injrstioe. Now, as all those enrolled were voters, excepting those between the ages of 20 and 21, and as there was an equal number of voters not enrolled, the Republicans, in fact, insisted that they had proved that there, were 256,000 voters ia that city. But the largest vote ever given there was 156,000 which these men now say was excessive, forgetting their own violent assertions that six years ago the voters outnumbered this by a hundred thousand! - THE DESTROYING ANGELS OF THE RADI CAL CENSUS. Will not these destroying angels stay their hands awhile when they find that by sweeping out the population of New York, thev are convicting themselves of gross and cruel frauds in the past T Will not that leprous journal which by its statistics is depopulating whole districts in the city more swiftly than pestilence and famine have ever done, pause a moment in its unhealthy course and tell us how it could find so many men fit for military dnty, where there are so few voters and citizens f After undergoing the foulest reproaches, we succeeded daring the war in getting an adjustment of the quotas. They were put upon the basis of a population of less numbers than the Republicans claimed then and more than they admit bow. All agree that New. York has increased since 1864. How does it happen, then, that at that time it was so crowded with voters who were liable to do military duty, while now there are so few who have a rieht to the elective franchise f I have always supposed that the man who was fit to tight the battles of his country was fit to take part ia its elections. We are now told that the city is very populous for the purpose of fighting, but very thinly settled lor the purpose ot voting. THE TEMPER OF REPRESENTATIVE RAD ICALS. - I said at the outset that we should know the temper of men who ask us to make them our representatives in the councils of the State or Nation. We have seen how the official statements and pub- lie speeches put forth by the Republicans in ld64 and in 1870 overthrow and destroy each other. Let me now call your attention to the spirit and tone with which these statements were made. We have been denounced traitors from 1864 down to this time because we then objected to their official enumeration as unjust and excessive. Good men were taught to look upon us with distrust and hatred. - Ministers ot the ixospei were persuaded to put forth false statements, mingled in with the sacred truth of religion, and to upbraid us because we sought to shield a portion of our people from cruelty and wrong. I do not complain of things said or done in the ex citement and bitterness growing out of a condition of civil war. But 1 invoke fair-minded Republicans, whether clergymen or lavmen. to think well before they suffer those who have misled them in the past to mislead them again. They come before von. iu effect, saying all that we told you about the quotas of the city of New xorK was untrue. xHoveroneiesa, these statements served us a good turn We then asktd mm to denounce even man as m traitor who did not hold six years ago that ine population oj new xoru was much more lAoaasttiioa.-. . . v' :' . i" 1 -it ! BOARD OF E4t7A.I2ATIO.X : ' -., m. su b m ibb iTB vBai ( -9 wms viaw , r ora-A Tie, oXiricail,.. . :f ' -? t toe : it 1 The Members of the State ,.Bpai4;f, r-quauzation, elected, 9a. the 11th, efc; October, 1870, are as follows :. ' ! First D'lstrictHamQton : '". ' William Si Groesbece, J. Dan. Jones; 'it. T: Carson. Second District Butler aad Warren : Charles Ford.' -;...- r . 1 l .., - Third District Montgomery1 "and JPre-ble: David Barneti..-".i -m, ! F- - Fourth District Clemost and BtewnV William RorrDEBUSH.'Ji; -Jia i J . d f t Fifth District aeo,'ninti and Fayette'- John Hubtcy tSmUh.'! ' p 'a- " Sixth District Roes and ffigbland : Samuel E. Hibbek. iJ v;u a; ut3j 1 ' Seventh District Adams, Pike Scioto , and Jaeksen : W. Tv Washak: , Eighth i District : - Lawrenej (Jaflia, Meigs and Vintoa ft WUHam froth. : si 1 Ninth District Athens;' Hoakingaand Fairfield v Alexander Wbtte, , " Tenth District Franklin rand" Pickaway O. E Nil.R...':r';-j i ' Eleventh District Clarkey Champaign and Madisea: Charles PheUis. n j - Twelfth District"-Miamt, Darke and Shelby t S. A. Lrckey? v. .f .itt ' . ,n Thirteenth i District Loran-. - Union'.' Marion and Hardin-: James FuUinaton. 1 Fourteenth District-Washington! Mori gan and part of Noble: Enoch 8. Mcintosh: Fifteenth District Muskingum and Perry : - Daniel B.Ltnn. . Ir- - Sixteenth District-Delaware and Lick ing : Andrew, j. smith. " i Seventeenth and Twenty-eighth Die-, trict Koox, Morrow, Holmes and Wayne: William Barton, r ' t.- Eighteenth District Coshocton rand Tuscarawas: Richard McClelland, r. Nineteenth District Guernsey: Monroe and a part of Noble S.Wm Vau Meter. .Twentieth District .Belmont and Har-- rison : JSentamtn E. Dunaan. t i-.f . Twenty-first District Carroll i .and. Stark : Josiah C. Shaw. '1 '. Twenty-second District Jefferson and Columbiana : dwi Dutton. . Twenty-third. District Trumbull and Mahoning : Orfaw L. Waloott. Twenty-fourth District "Ashtabula, Lake and Geauga : Constantine C. Field. Twenty-fifth . District Cuyahoga : James M.Hoyt. ' ' '.' - - ' Twenty-sixth District Portage and Summit:- Henry S. Stevens. - t t , Twenty-seventh District Medina and Lorain : . Alvan D. Licey. . . ''-.. Twenty-ninth District Ashland' and Richland : Abraham Baughman". ' Thirtieth District Huron. Erie Sandusky and Ottawa : O.T. Minardi . Thirty-first District Seneca, Crawford and Wyandot: Andrew Dickson. Thirty-second District - Mercer. Au glaize, Allen, Van. Wert, Paulding, Defiance and Williams : Francis J. Lye, jr. Thirty-third District Hancock. Wood. Lucas, Fulton, Henry and - Putnam : Dresden W. M. Howard. ,.t . ' BanocjiATa nt smatx cap..i :4..-17 XeftiUicant tn Italict . , 17 THE . NEW tlABIHAIu - Saaaethiag ia . Bslatioa to Thrall la it a ' Doctor Carreer From the Cincinnati Enqulrstl . . There seems to have beea a little difficulty in defining , the status of William R. Thrall, the Columbus druggist,.. who is to suoceed Andy Hiokenlooper as Mar shal of -the Southern district. " Thrall is the son of .his father, and is not his father, as the liazeue innocently supposed, tie keeps a drug store in Columbus, and has attained the nre-eminentlv dignified po sition of Private Secretary- of Governor. Hayes. We met last evening the editor of one of the most staunch Republican papers ia Central. Ohio, and as this editorial gentleman seems to know .'mere about Thrall than, some editorial people in this city, we are inclined to make use 01 some ot his superfluous information. He mentions as an incident of Thrall's career the fact that Thrall went into -the army during the late clash." as a sur geon, but fox some reason didn't stay to see the " thing out. He came home to Columbus and brought with him a negro servant, whom he put into the service of his father. . The negro hadn't been there very long until, yielding to his native weakness, he stele the family . spoons. Thrall had him arrested, and the negro acknowledged his guilt. He didn't care so much about punishing., him, but he I. and so sent the colored kleptomaniac out to the country to work on a farm until his wages should liquidate the amount of the stolen property. Meanwhile, it became. necessary to draft some patriots for the war, and Thrall found that his name was going into the fatal wheel. He went to one of the substitute committee in one of the wards, and asked them how mnch they were paying for substitutes. ; He was informed that $250 was the current price for healthy ones. . He suggested that he had one which he would enter, for the races next day, and at bis urgent request a check for $250 was given him in advance. Next day he sent Barney McCabe out to the country to hunt, up his spoon-stealing negro, and paid him $25.00 for frightening the poor devil into the belief that it was remtentiary or army tor him. The negro consented to the latter, and was enlisted as Thrall's substitute and in Thrall's ward, when another $250 was planked down for him. These are facts which our Republican editor stands pre pared to prove. A report of the ease was made out and sent to the Department at Washington, and Thrall drew up a defense and forwarded it to the Attorney General. Nobody ever saw this document, and while they talk about the matter in Columbus, they have never been able to get at Thrall's side of the case. Our Republican editor says that he is m favor of Republicans holding all the offices in the country, but he thinks that this is a very bad appointment. Whea Charles Dickens died, among the many facts brought out by the con troversies which followed his death, was the information that the great humorist had rewritten for his children, in a sort of paraphrase of Scripture fer their better comprehension, the history of the life and lessons of the Christian's Saviour. Mr. Dicens himself alluded to it as an evidence of his love and veneration fox Christianity in a letter written oa the very day before his death, aud it was said that that curious and Interesting biography would be published-for the benefit of the children of ail the world. The friends of Mr. Dickens in Boston now have direct information from his family in England that one of his most positive and absolute injunctions was that the manuscript should never be published; and it never will be seen by any: one outside the author's home circle. It is asserted at St. Louis that a representation of Commodore Vanderhilt and other Eastern railroad magnates have secured a large tract of land opposite that city in Illinois, wish tiow. u w .vi!.i.;n mnnater stock vard. and that muii rvi. 1 " ? - ' . .. negotiations are progressing lor a similar tract on wn siu i " hundred acres of land will be required for the operatiomTof these gentlemen. : A number of small business houses In Cameron, Missouri, were burned Monday night, involving a loss of about $40,000, with an insurance of about $25,000. -.., - - 1 '- PAAX.X fs rATEEMAN. batss to tan TUJtm, um iojo?aiuul. - taa.0..i a-fOast.h..k ts co Xwo times 1 !1 Twomontha 15 00 Thro Bum. .;. ... 00 0ewMk.4e,.fK. Two weeks........ 5 00 T time months SO GO Kixmonua. 30 VO One year...." 50 0 Leoal notices. 80s oarJiao-aiat. and las tot each asjditianslinsertjsiu .Q ,,-.,. , , ... r-. , VEEK1T STifESlUlir Oatlme....:..r 50 TVomonths..;i...7 60 TwolimsoA.i.; 6of Three mooch-.. ..10 00 Three times .... 3 SSI Six months 15 00 One month. 4 nn One .....:.;. -.85 00 ayawaaaiasiaaaaawaiMMwwaawpwaaaaai 'papers are proposing, Seeretary .Cox, for President . Unfirtinateiyf he 'was born in Canada. . V . , " GeneraLT.A Morris has been appointed receiver of the adlahapoCs,' Lafayette and Cincinnati railroad by the Circuit Court, Indianapolis, "on application of several ef the stockholders of the road. d-..n httAP'lABc;-'!''' ' i.Jft 9 ThiaraambV'hreatlNdlilfrlast -Jot a 110 muur sola ibb cnous, uu ; v Xtecenbe .soled h shoe. The New York Oomsmicial Advertiser enaaanees that a Vewark nan's wife has had twins, and'that i is going : to have uor, arrested ior,rjeaang., j , j As George Pendleton has no son, a paragraph is going the ronnds to the effect that " A son of the Hon. George H. Pendleton is one of the defenders of Paris, f 1-531: ;ti nr. a i Ji . -:,,;, i A oosresponaeBt f th;e Epieopsl Meth- oowt,in arguing; fee the style' ef the for me Methodist ' preachers, J says it "We confess to-soma libiag for Iheilivisions of the xtld black rpreaeher of. , our- youth ' Bredern ' said -this a Id iIita nf th finnth '' 1 shall Tfirst explain de-text : secondly, I snail argue it; and . thirdly,, put on de rousements.' ' The ' rousements' were the grand characteristics of old Methodist preaotiagihi'i ,.,. i : ..: .Key. .John Moore, a Congregational clergyman: of, Philadelphia, . and Rev. Moses Hull, a Spiritualist, have beea recently .engaged in. discussing the subject 01 moueru . spiritualism, at Cincinnati. Mr. Moore acknowledges that bad spirits have the power of returning to earth. but repudiated altogether the idea of the food ones beiDg permitted to do like wise., jar., null suDmits per contra that both caff come.' and that without the in- fluenoe f-good spirits we shonld be reduced o . very ( unhappy- condition, in- deed.. ,s ., ;...,;,..,., ... . It was discovered .that soma one had entered the Clerk's., office of the Orange Circuit Court, at Paoli,' Indiana, on the 9th inst., ' but nothing seemed to have been disturbed, until last Thursday, when it was Jound that every book, including order book, fee book. atiDearance docket. - J udge's docket, record of executions, &c. , wmcn contained' ny reference 'to the cause of Eliza . Bowles : vs. William A. Bowles, for divorce wherein Mrs. Bowles had obtained a divorce, with $25,000 alimony, but the judgment remained unpaidhad beea mutilated, and the entire record of that cause out out and gone; also, -the entire files of the case, together with the execution,' which had been returned, and a transcript made out for the Supreme Court, but never used. DIED. AtcCUBET pa Wednesday morning, October 26th, EmtA Elizabeth, infant, daughter of William and. Elizabeth McCurry, aged nine months and ten days. . " ' ' . ; ' Tnneral son loos from Ko. 115 South street, oernerof Fourth" street, at o'clock P. M., today.. .Friends aad aeqiauntancea are invited to attend. . . , - . . 1 . NEWADVEETISEHEHTSJ MASONIC STATED' MEETING of Mt. Vernon Commanderv No. 1 K. T.. r this (Thursday) evening, October 27th, 1 Bv orriir. 1670, By order,. O. A. S, SENTER, Recorder. PROBATE NOTICE. SETTLEMENT . OF ACCOUNTS. The following accounts have been filed in the Probate Court of Franklin eonaty, Ohio, for settlement, aad will be for hearing on. Thursday, November 17th, 1870, to-wit: The first account of Joseph P. Brooks, Executor of John Brooks, deceased ; first acoount of M. P. Tone, Administrator of John C. Andrews, deceased; first account of James' Sim peen, Executor of William Parrish. deceased; nratacconnt of tr. S. Innis, Administrator of Samuel Wolf, deceased ; peoond aeosunt of C . E seriy, Guardian of L. E. Hammel i third account sf John Kilgore, Guardian of B. A. O'fiarra; final account ef C. Jacob, Ouardiam sf Albert M. and. -Xoretta U. Oury ; final account of Xra and George Carpenter, Executor. 27. Carpenter, deceased ; final account of . Amanda A. Price, Administratrix of Philip Price, deceased; final account of John Knipfer, Guardian sf Christens Welle; final acoount of Josiah Kinnear, Guardian of Emma Peal;' final account of Jacob E. Lowe, Guardian f- Sarah A-;rTnffman ; final account of John Wolf, Administrator of Jacob ' Wolf, deceased ; final account of John A. Keller, Administrator of Benjamin Sutler, deceased; final account of Horses Wilson. Administrator of K. D. Dunbar. deeeaaed ; final aoooont of John Helpman, Guardian of Jane Allen ; final account of John Help- man, ixuaroiau oi uaviu 1 1. fry. i tiuoJM .rutin, fro Date Judge. , Columbus, Ohio, October 25th, 1870. :eeRditAwit" - ' - VTOTICE. MY WIFE, CAROLINE a3 ' MILXEE. "having left my bed snd board, all persons ars hereby notified that X will not pay any bills she, may contract. occat-ji " i johjm u. .Mri.JL.iSK. NB.KELLYf ARCHITECT 4 StPEKHTEXDEXT - OFFICE Ho. 18 EAST BBOAD ST., . ' c p 'tlxm: b.xj 8,- o. Plans. Specifications and Estimates for every deseriptaoa of building executed in the most improved manner and shortest notice. Ajomtect oi mgn Bcnoot ouuaing, tr. nay-den'e new building and B. . Smith's new residence, at Columbus, Ohio. sept30-d3m LEATHER, ETC. pATTERSON & MEEK, .-..' '..-Importers aad dealers in French & German Calf Skins, '" SHOE- FINDINGS, Saddlery Hardware, Collars, Whips, Horse Blaalteta,. laaaero Tools, 011, tildes, Pelts, 'Farsy" Fly Nets, etc. No. 1 QWYinri BLOCK, Town St, ..'',.. Colaamoas, Oaio. 1el4-eod3mo HOB.SE BTiATTKETS. H OESE BLANKETS. LAP ROBES, 'BTJFI'AL.O robes, V ALASKA ROBES, , ; . "WOLF ROBES. ' A great variety, all styles and prices, . Wholesale and, Retail. .u Wurta ' : p. HATDE BON, Tt "v llrw 24 and 26 Broad street. o&l.thtl-' -: rags..: R AGS WANTED. "l'WO XftnTDBlCD THOOSANiy nonnds of Country Bags wanted, for which Cash will Le paia oy .- -mus. hibjbisim uo.. Mane So Sort HiA St, Columbus, O. oct2a-sod-Aw. . . Foerster's lmoa Crackers